Girlstart to Launch Third Year of Destember

GIRLSTART TO LAUNCH THIRD YEAR OF DESTEMBER, TO EXPAND ON LAST YEAR’S 180,000 UNIQUE VISITORS WITH CURRICULUM ALIGNED WITH NATIONAL STEM STANDARDS, OUTREACH TO EDUCATORS

(AUSTIN) – Last year, Girlstart reached approximately 180,000 unique visitors through its online DeSTEMber program, featuring 31 days of STEM learning activities specifically designed for girls and their families, utilizing common household and pantry items to facilitate STEM learning through winter break. This year, the Austin-based nonprofit organization aims to further expand the program’s reach, particularly in Texas, through the creation of curriculum aligned with national STEM standards for K-12 education, and outreach to educators (which includes making the full month’s curriculum available to educators prior to the Dec. 1 launch date).

Girlstart is also partnering with a number of STEM-centric entities to create daily activities, including the Birch Aquarium, Dallas Zoo, Sylvia Earle Alliance, the Franklin Institute, Space Center Houston, and the Texas State Aquarium. Girlstart will utilize Google Hangouts, allowing presenters to demo activities live, and all presentations will be archived on the DeSTEMber site, joining the already-archived 2011 and 2012 DeSTEMber activities.

“DeSTEMber allows us to use the Internet to bring our STEM activities to a great number of girls and families, during a time of year when student learning is interrupted by several weeks of no school,” said Tamara Hudgins, executive director of Girlstart. “Through making our curriculum available to teachers, and by a more deliberate integration of the curriculum with national K-12 STEM standards, we’re giving them a way to supplement STEM education both inside and outside the classroom.”

DeSTEMber will conclude an eventful 2013 for Girlstart, which included the launch of its inaugural Women in STEM Awards, honoring the contributions of STEM professionals in Texas; the opening of its STEM Studio and Mini- Planetarium, expanding its programming capacity for STEM education at Austin’s Girlstart STEM Center; and being named one of four exemplary STEM programs ready for nationwide implementation by Change the Equation, a nonprofit, nonpartisan, CEO-led initiative that is mobilizing the business community to improve the quality of STEM learning in the United States.

ABOUT GIRLSTART

Girlstart, founded in Austin in 1997, is the only community-based informal STEM education nonprofit in the nation specifically dedicated to empowering and equipping girls in STEM, through year-round programming that promotes girls’ early engagement and academic success in STEM, encourages girls’ aspirations and persistence in STEM education and careers, and incubates a talented and diverse STEM workforce. Its innovative, nationally-recognized programs include after-school and summer camps for students, professional development for teachers, and community and online STEM education outreach programs.

Girlstart cultivates a culture where risk is rewarded, curiosity is encouraged, and creativity is expected. As a result, Girlstart girls are connected, brave, and resilient. Girlstart makes girls more successful, and inspires them to take on the world’s greatest challenges.

Austin Branch of AAUW to Present Girlstart Intern Bonnie-Claire Duren with Miriam Tormollan Scholarship Today

WHAT:
Girlstart intern Bonnie-Claire Duren, a STEM CREW (Creative, Resourceful, Empowered Women) member and University of Texas at Austin student who works in the Girlstart After School Program, will be awarded the Miriam Tormollan Scholarship by the Austin Branch of the American Association of University Women (AAUW) at the Girlstart STEM Center on Friday.

According to Anita Knight, Austin AAUW President, STEM education is a priority for AAUW in Austin as well as nationally, and Tormollan, the former Crockett High School for who the award was named, worked with the Expanding Your Horizons program (the precursor to the Girls In STEM Conference, one of Girlstart’s annual STEM outreach programs connecting middle school students with Austin-area STEM professionals).

Speaking for Girlstart, Executive Director Tamara Hudgins noted, “We are grateful for AAUW’s commitment to our programs, and now to our STEM CREW, by providing vital scholarship funds to a worthy student who also shares our common goals.”

About AAUW
The Austin Branch of the American Association of University Women (AAUW) was established in 1923 and is a nationwide community of more than 150,000 members and supporters from all walks of life who advise, mentor, and support one another, including 1,000 branches, and 500 college/university institution partners. We believe in the mission of AAUW to advance equity for women and girls through advocacy, education, philanthropy, and research.

About the Miriam Tormollan Scholarship Fund
This fund was established in 2012 to honor Miriam Tormollan upon her death. The Tormollan family designated this memorial fund to be used to help young women in mathematics and science at The University of Texas at Austin as that was one of their mother’s passions.

Miriam was an educator and activist for education of women and girls. She earned her BA ’43 and MA ‘50 in English from The University of Texas at Austin where she was selected for Phi Beta Kappa. Miriam was a teacher of advanced placement senior English at Crockett High School in Austin, Texas for more than 15 years and was recognized for her excellence by being selected twice as “Teacher of the Year.”

In 1974 Miriam became a member of AAUW and was active at both local and state levels. In 2006 she was selected as Woman of the Year for AAUW Texas. For fifteen years she served as the central coordinator for AAUW Texas. Miriam represented AAUW in many capacities including: working with the Austin ISD to create a sexual harassment policy; testifying before the Public Education Committee of the Legislature; serving on the Coalition for Public Schools; mentoring in the Special School for Teenage Pregnant Girls; working with the Lone Star Girl Scout Council; helping with the “Expanding Your Horizons” program (precursor of Girlstart’s Girls In STEM Conferences).

Toyota Partners with Girlstart at Pecan Street Festival to Raise up to $5,000

#ToyotaGiving tagged social media to trigger $3 donations

Toyota Partners with Girlstart at Pecan Street Festival to Raise up to $5,000

#ToyotaGiving tagged social media to trigger $3 donations

(AUSTIN) Toyota’s social media fundraising campaign, #ToyotaGiving, continues efforts in Austin, TX September 28th and 29th at the Pecan Street Festival. #ToyotaGiving is part of Toyota’s sponsorship of select yoga, craft and street festivals July through December 2013 to raise up to $50,000 for non-profit organizations.

On September 28 and 29, 2013, the Toyota Retreat will be present at the Pecan Street Festival partnering with local nonprofit Girlstart to encourage attendees to “share their passion” via Twitter, Instagram and Facebook tagged with “#ToyotaGiving”to raise funds for the organization. Individuals can pose for a photo, choosing from a list of 100 stylized signs at the Toyota Retreat to declare what they are most passionate about. Every photo posted to Twitter, Facebook or Instagram using #ToyotaGiving triggers a$3 donation from Toyota, up to a total of $5,000. In addition to the opportunity to raise funds for Girlstart via #ToyotaGiving, guests of theToyota Retreat at the Pecan Street Festival also will enjoy a D.I.Y. Inspiration Lounge, complimentary Spa Ritual Nail Art, GIF Photo Booth, silk screen tote bags, and a phone charging station.

The goal of the #ToyotaGiving initiative is more than raising funds, it’s about encouraging people to share what they are most passionate about so that they may inspire passion in others.

Girlstart, founded in Austin, TX, aims to increase girls’ interest and engagement in Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) through innovative, nationally-recognized informal STEM education programs.Girlstart develops and implements a range of innovative, research- and standards-based education and mentorship programs designed to promote girls’ early engagement and academic success in STEM, encourage girls’ aspirations and persistence in STEM education and careers, and incubate a talented and diverse STEM workforce. Girlstart was founded in 1997 in Austin, TX and is the only community-based informal STEM education nonprofit in the nation specifically dedicated to empowering and equipping girls in STEM through year round educational programming. With the help of the community, Girlstart is hoping to generate enough participation to raise the total $5,000 through the #ToyotaGiving campaign.

The 2013 #ToyotaGiving program launched earlier this year at Wanderlust Yoga and Music Festival in Bondville, VT. Other events include Wanderlust Festivals in Cooperville, CO and Lake Tahoe, CA; Renegade Craft Fair in Brooklyn, NY and San Francisco, CA. and will conclude at One of A Kind in Chicago, IL in December.

Pecan Street Festival will take place September 28th (11 a.m. – 10 p.m.) and September 29th (11 a.m. – 8 p.m.) at Sixth Street in Austin, Texas.

To learn more, visit www.ToyotaGiving.com.

Girlstart Announces Inaugural Women in Stem Award Honorees

TO BE RECOGNIZED AT GAME CHANGERS ANNUAL LUNCHEON ON OCT. 17

GIRLSTART ANNOUNCES INAUGURAL WOMEN IN STEM AWARD HONOREES, TO BE RECOGNIZED AT GAME CHANGERS ANNUAL LUNCHEON ON OCT. 17

(AUSTIN) – Girlstart has announced the recipients of its inaugural Women in STEM Awards, honoring six Texas women who have made significant impacts in their fields and communities utilizing their STEM education. The award recipients will be honored as part of Game Changers, Girlstart’s annual luncheon event, which takes place this year on Thursday, Oct. 17 at the AT&T Conference Center and Hotel, featuring Kari Byron of Discovery Channel’s “Mythbusters” as the keynote speaker.

Honorees include

Dr. Susan M. Cox, Regional Dean of the University of Texas Medical School, who will be course director for the newly-created UT Southwestern Academic Colleges and overseeing the UT Southwestern/Seton Austin Medical Education Programs;

Lisa Lucero, Commissioner for the Governor’s Commission for Women, who has worked with the Texas Oil and Gas Association, ExxonMobil, the Texas Department of Agriculture, Texas Racing Commission, and the Texas Senate, and remains a strong advocate for STEM education for girls;

Dr. Emily Niemeyer, Professor of Chemistry and Herbert and Kate Dishman Chair in Science at Southwestern University, who co-founded Southwestern’s Environmental Studies Program, initiated the STEPS program at Southwestern for science-minded high school students from underrepresented groups, and serves as co-director of the HHMI-Southwestern Inquiry Initiative;

Charlotte Vick, an oceanographer with the Sylvia Earle Alliance, who has also served as a Google Content Manager for its “Explore the Ocean” layer since its 2008 launch, and who works directly with Girlstart as a summer camp guest speaker for its popular oceanography-themed camps;

Bertha Bermudez, this year’s Girlstart Alumnae Award recipient, who attended the Girlstart After School program at Mendez Middle School in Austin, served as a Girlstart STEM CREW member in college (while earning her degree in Mathematical Sciences from the University of Texas in Austin), and is currently a Houston-based processing geophysicist; and

Shree Bose, this year’s Girlstart Global Ambassador, recognized at the 2012 Game Changers event for winning Grand Prize in the first-ever Google Science Fair, who was also named one of Glamour Magazine’s 21 Amazing Women of the Year in 2011, has showcased her research to National Institute of Health directors and President Obama, and is currently a sophomore at Harvard University en route to a career in science and research.

“We’re glad to honor women who have made a difference in STEM education,” said Tamara Hudgins, executive director of Girlstart. “The six women we’ve chosen to recognize show what’s possible for women who dedicate themselves to pursuing STEM knowledge. The differences they’re making in a diverse range of STEM fields are truly inspiring to all of us at Girlstart.”

Girlstart will also honor Dell, Inc. with a Corporate STEM Champion Award. Dell is a strong advocate for STEM education, and has been a valuable partner to Girlstart throughout its 16-plus years of providing STEM education programming to elementary and middle-school-aged girls.

Sponsorships are still available for Game Changers, and 10-person tables and a limited number of individual tickets will be available starting later this month. More information on the event, including more on the award honorees and a list of current sponsors, is online at http://www.girlstart.org/game-changers.

ABOUT GIRLSTART

Girlstart, founded in Austin in 1997, is the only community-based informal STEM education nonprofit in the nation specifically dedicated to empowering and equipping girls in STEM, through year-round programming that promotes girls’ early engagement and academic success in STEM, encourages girls’ aspirations and persistence in STEM education and careers, and incubates a talented and diverse STEM workforce. Its innovative, nationally-recognized programs include after-school and summer camps for students, professional development for teachers, and community and online STEM education outreach programs.

Girlstart cultivates a culture where risk is rewarded, curiosity is encouraged, and creativity is expected. As a result, Girlstart girls are connected, brave, and resilient. Girlstart makes girls more successful, and inspires them to take on the world’s greatest challenges.